Monday Feb 04, 2008

Where can you find hot technologies, open-source communities, and job opportunities? Sun is looking for students who are ready to innovate and create the future. For more information see the Student Developers Page

Thursday Dec 20, 2007

Over the years, the Enterprise Java Technologies Tech Tips have covered a wide variety of enterprise Java technology topics. Here's a short quiz that tests your knowledge of some topics covered in recent Tech Tips. You can find the answers at the end of the quiz.[Read More]

Friday Oct 26, 2007

Web Services Interoperability Technology (WSIT) is an implementation of open web services technologies that enables interoperability between Java EE and .NET. WSIT along with Java API for XML-Based Services (JAX-WS) comprise the stack of web services technologies in GlassFish v2. The web services stack in GlassFish v2 is called Project Metro or Metro for short. In this tip, you'll build and run an interoperability test in which a Metro-based client communicates with a .NET Windows Communication Foundation (WCF)-based service.[Read More]

The Dynamic Faces framework brings the power of Ajax to traditional JavaServer Faces Technology (often abbreviated as JSF) applications. With Dynamic Faces, you can add Ajax functionality to a JSF application with little or no JavaScript. This tip will show you how you can use Dynamic Faces to build a real-time, stock query application that does client-side polling. [Read More]

Monday Oct 01, 2007

Java EE allows you to protect web resources through declarative security, but this approach does not allow you to protect local beans used by servlets and JavaServer Pages (JSPs). This tip will show you a way to extend JSF security configuration beyond web pages using managed bean methods.[Read More]

This tip will show you how to develop a simple web service that uses type substitution, as well as a client that consumes the web service. You'll see how to build the web service from a Java class and from a WSDL file.[Read More]

Friday Aug 24, 2007

This tip shows you how to use supporting tokens with sender-vouches SAML assertions and how to use Security Token Service(STS)-issued tokens. In combination, supporting tokens with sender-vouches SAML assertions and STS-issued tokens can be used to issue a token from an STS and delegate it to a user who is different than the web service client. [Read More]